/ 1 , r;) . \, . , .4.1 1 L I !„, r<f r - y vSerni-lAleekl a •' - '4' t ',,, , COMPLETE CAAIPUS COVERAGE Icr - 1 1 ; rtttt t ti t i k _ ,7,-,,,,,, „,, ~,,,,,,i.,, VOL. 27, No. 50 CO-ED PRIVILEGES GRANTED FOR OPEN 'HOUSE TOMORROW W.S.G.A. Sanctions Free Social Functions—Union Arranges Novel Entertainment SENIORS, ADMINISTRATORS, FACULTY TO PARTICIPATE Class Pre'sidents Will Serve as Hosts in Old Main—Group Plans New Tradition Free social functions for co-eds at tending the second open house spon sored by Student Union in Old Main tomorrow night were announced by Helen Buckwalter '3l, head of the W. S. G. A. yesterday. The affair, which is being held for seniors, faculty members having se nsors in their classes, and administra tm men, is one of a series sponsored by the Student Union, headed by Ray mond A. Bowers '3l All senior men and women are in sited to attend. Senior men may in t ite co-eds from any class, and the women may do likcwhe in extendaig invitations to men students. In vitations lime been sent to Pres,dent and him Ralph D Hetcei, deans of all the schools, heads of all depot 1- ments, and faculty members uho have seniors in their classes. A program has Iron arranged to provide entertainment throughout the evening. The Nlttany Nine orchestra soil! play music. for dancing in the second floor lounge, and novel enter tainment attractions soil! Ir. staged David C. McLaughlin '3l and Louise Holredita '3l will act as host and hostess. Name Faculty Group Ballots will be given to all those attending as they enter to vote in a popularity contest Among the titles to he decided will be the best chiseler in the College, the best, dressed man and who thinks he is, the best dressed co-ed, the handsomest professor, the molt abi,entsminded professor, and the professor who tells the most stories cLiss. Members of the faculty serving on committees for tha affair arc Dean of Men Arthur R 'Warnock, Dean of Women Charlotte E. Ray, Dr. Charles W. Stoddart, Dean of the School of Liberal Arts, and Robert E Gal braith, of the dnParttuent of Eng 4 .%h composition. Student committee members are Helen Buckwalter '3l, Edna R. Roderick '3l, Alan B Cut ting '3l, Frank Diedrich '3l, John P. Liveny '3l, J. Neely McCown '3l, and Elvadote It. Noderer '3l. "The object of the affair is to begin a tradition of senior get-to-gethers during th-lt last semester at the Col lege," Bowers stated yesterday "A good old farewell party is being plan lied by the Union to furnish pleasant memories of the class of 1931." COLLEGE REVEALS SUSPENSION OF 89 Grades Total Most. Failures Here, 8010 Huffman According to figures compiled in the Registrar's office, more students from the third fifth in high school graduating dosses were dropped from College for poor scholarship during the Past semester than from any other high school rank Of the eighty-nine students sus pended, thirty had graduated in the third-fifth of their high school chooses, se hile the second-fifth ranks second in mortnlity with twenty-eight drop ped Taken in number, of third-fifth student, enrolled at the CoIlea", the figures resent that 3.70 per cent of this group were ejected, while last fifth students rank first m this grad ation mith 7.27 per cont. 4.61 pet cent of the fourth-fifth students en tered here were dropped, 2.53 per cent of the second group students, and 1 07 per cent of then in the first fifth Who's Dancing Town Guls at Delta Sigma Pin (Subsenphon) Vanatty Tea • Tomorrup Night Stulent &lon Open House kg Seniors In Old Minn LIBRARY GETS LOW BUDGET ALLOWANCE' Secures Less Than One Percent of Total for College Expenses To Rank Sixty-third In Land Grant Institutions Although Penn State's Carnegie lib college libraries in the number of boo listed with the last six nt the amount published by the United States Bute. While the library loaned 43,675 1 total revenue was $27,501, less than nm allotted for College expenses, the+ compilation of data on sixty-nine land grant colleges and universities shows Expenditures averaged $7 for each student annually here, as contrasted with an average of $l9 at the Um ersity of California, which led the list with $331,004 devoted to library expenses Of this sum, Penn State students contribute $5 in fees each year, leaving only $2 of the average'' general cost appropriated from State money. Cornell E•cecds College Of the five other institutions whose ^xpenses were limited to less than one percent of the College budget, none came within 2000 of Penn State's enrollment, and only one re ported more than 200 und-igiaduates Alaska Agiicultural college, with sixty-four students, and Rhode Island State college, with 626, wen ranked Just beneath Penn State. In sharp contrast to such condi tions, California, Illinois and Minne sota nere given liberal financial aid. The enrollment of all three exceeds 10,000, and these schools topped the list of amounts allotted per student Minnesota averaged $2O for eery undergraduate, and used five and two tenths percent of the total appropi l otion for library maintenance. Cornell, whose enrollment is only slightly greater than Penn - State, ap propriated an average of .$1.5 per stu dent, using one and fom-tenths of the total revenue for binary expens- ORATORS CONCLUDE TOUR OF COLLEGES Encounter St. Joseph Debaters In 107 Main Engineering Wednesday Night Returning rsterday from a debate tour of •caen colleges, a Penn State team composed of Omlle A Hitch cock '3l and Hairy W Lightstone '3l, as dl make their last home ap pearance against St Joseph's col lege repicsentatives Wednesday irght The contest oath the Philadelphia college orators will he held in 107 Mom Engineeiing building at 7.10 o'clock and skill be conducted under the Oregon stale of debuts with Penn State supporting the negative of the free ti ade question The St Joseph's team has faced representatives of eight colleges this season Included in this glom, me Hakerfoid college, University of Pennsylvania, Getty, burg, Syracuse, and Lehigh. Oppose }Mohnen Speakers A women's team, composed of Florence F Fowler 'it and Maim.: Hathaway engage Bushnell university co-eds at Lemzburg Mon day night. The debate will be in regular style with Penn State sup porting the Min:native of "Resolved That tlrs Sesetal States Should En act Compulsory Unemployment In surance Legislation." In the Cup completed yesteulav, Hitchcock and Lightstone debated the questions of unemployment in surance and five bade with both metes and women's colleges En gagements were held with t cpresent awes of Cemgetown univelsdy, Wil liam and Mary coliege, Ninth and South Caiohno State collets, Rol lens college. Univei say of Fla ala and Georgia School of Technology. ELECTRIC APPLIANCE C %USES FIRE IN EXAMINER'S ROM! Fitz producing considerable smoke but causing little daninge, broke out in the home of Dr Call E. Mar quardt, Colic ge exinninei, loot Wednesday night. Originating in a heated tleetiie curling hen, the blaze filled the thhd fleet with smote him a buining set of toilet uittcles. ril emen clamed a smoke-filled room, donned inns masks and man, mashed the fire ten nunutes after the alarm. 2000 ATTEND SOCIAL NIGHT Al>pro•imutely 2,000 people attend_ STATE COLLEGE, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1901 laly tanks seventh among land grant Mks issued animally to students, it in of money at do command, a sunny of Education has disclosed books at the time of the sureey,ots ne-tenths of one percent of the amount es With the advantage, the Ness Yotk land grant colhge exceeded Penn State by a dose margin in the number of books loaned annually. Cornrmri ions of Penn State's li biary facilities ult.!, those of other unisersities in the State show that the Unners , ty of Penamlyania ex ceeds the College in the total number of books by more than 500,000, oink Pitt is only slightly better equipped In floor space and seating arrange ments, the library building fails by a snide margin of meeting the requisrtes advised in the report. Employing °rely available seat, the Carnegie li brary can accommodate only 350 stu dents, less than one-tznth of the Col lege enrollment and less than one half of the percentage o loch nas urged as a fan imminent In commenting on the figures n the report, o Inch was compiled dur ing the past too years, Mis, Gladys R Cranme•, acting librarian, declar ed that while a slight increase has been observed both in the number of books in circulation and the total ap propriation, the ratios re:neural the same ASBURY MINISTER TO TALK SUNDAY Rev. Harold F. Carr Will Speak On 'Powerful Purposes' in Schuab Auditorium "Pim eiful Put poses," will be dm cussed by the Rev Hai old F Can, pastor of Asbury University ehm eh of Philadelphia, in an addles to chap.,l-goers to Selmah auditor lam at 11 o'clock Sunday morning. Alto army semen for tn-sray-sis months between his sophomore and Junior yours at Nebraska Wesleyan urns end y, Reverend Carr retained to his alma mates and soled as cen ter on the football tenni Ile seas selected by sow is waters of Omaha and Lincoln daily newspairms as all- State center GM, UP Coaching Following two vents of (.0.1011111:. at Broken Bow high school in Neb raska, the - ipealsor came East and entered the Boston Unit et-Itv School of Th'ologY 1n 1020 he received the degree of Bachelor of Sacred Theo logy flora the Boston institution As pastas of Pan locket Congregat ional chinch at Lowell, Moss, during a Near of pat t tune giaduato work, ho has the distinction of being the rust student pastor of the church which is the oldest in Lowell St Milks Methodist Einstopid chinch, Rockville Center, Long Island, then called R., emend Cnrr to seeme .1, CO-1,11401 with Di Wilfred C. Phil lip, Flom thut church ha came to the Urni.eisity of Penm.ylinnin where hew now pastel of the Asbury Uni vet sity ehuiLli, an institution for student work AT Pk:NOS BOSTON MEETING Prof Harry G. Parkimon, of the on al educatlon department, attended Iceently a t eglonal electing of ,oca fional tdoeatlon linttuaols at BON -1.011. Debris, Rubbish, Sidewalk Puddles To Undergo Purging in 'Clean-up' Lamm hung a sueemng clean-up umbrellas, olitautomolales and .unillu campaign in State Coll-ego no part of Items of rubbish dour to the /mitts a state,mle movement, Toun Couo- of small boys and antiquarian: ail at a meet.ng Wednesday sight aP' Health and sit:Mahon day follows proved a &ge—pawl:lg program to while junk will be outlawed on Thurs. begin Monday and extend through 'day. Accumulations of trash and other Ft alas. , materuils ale to be removed at that ,11100. Finlay has been &Anat.! On Monday, officially de , ognated as when the final loathes s talks and str:et day," all will be checked Tot declivities I"fini' i b ut"lnv" which become inundated in times o f will be applied and the accumulated the great rams and which constitute debris ‘‘iiieb should be placed on al a Inuard to the shins of the collegians r ley-ways will be collected. as th , y tr,..ad the concrete to their July occupation 1.,,,e1ing a cot iettive bagel at a. second sphere of activity. Tuesday' will Ir' ,:evoted to gardens and yards. Pinchot Approves ApprOpriation Bill, Signature of Governor Glll'olll Pinchot on a 5910,000 unemploy ment relief building appropriation for the College sins obtained on April 1 and funds %sill be immed iately available, according to Adri an 0. Morse, executive secretary of the College. Plans for a dairy building and a home economics unit to be con structed with this money arc now in the hands of the College archi tect, Charles Z. Klauder of Phila delphia, and will be turned over to contractors for bids by the twenti eth of ne',t month, Morse stated. Allowing three weeks for estimates, it is expected that uork will begin by the second week of June. KEEBLE '32 KILLED WHEN AUTO SKIDS Falls From Car as Door Opens On Dangerous Road—Dies Of Internal Injuries Donald C Keeble, 21, a junior in the School of Liberal Arts, riled in the Johnstown hospital at 1.20 o'clock Wednesday afternoon train internnl injuries received wh"n he was thrown from a car as it skidded on a bad stretch of road near Ebensburg early Wednesday morning. Leaving his home in Pittsburgh late Tuesday night to return her+, Keel,le was accompanied by Newell J Lewis jr '3l, the drner of tire ear, who escaped injury. Between Mundy's Corner and Ebensburg on the poorly conditioned, light-crooned road, the car skidded from the paving. Al though no upset occuwed, the door next to Keeble came open and he was thrown from the car Complaining of nu injury with the exception of a pain in the back, Kee hie visited a doctor in Ebensburg and Was taken to the 'Johnstown hospital There it WAR learned fi,e ribs had been broken .n'the, s ^ccident, one of which had punctured 'a long Ke•:ble's mother was notified and was at his bedside when /re cbcd Publications Louder Born in Pitt:blurb December 17, 1909, Keeble roceived his early train ing in the public schools, graduating in the ,cond fifth of In, class at Schenley high school in 1927. Ile en tered the commerce and finance cur riculum at Penn Stat- , in 1928 Kee ble is sure ived by his moth-'r, Mrs Donald G Keeble, and three sisters Funeial services cudl be held tenon , rose afternoon from his home in the East Liberty distilet, Pittsbuigh. Noshle was a member of Po oil, Junior business board and of the Tiondboo/, stall In scholastic attain ment he ranked in the first fifth of his College class, mainta,ning mi av, lags of two, Ile ccas a moniker of Pi Delta Epsilon, honorary journalicin society, Delta Sigma Pi, comnriree honorary, and of Delta Tau Delta, social fiaternity Ile took Taut in several Thespian productions and Was cast in its foithconung show FROTH RECEIVES SECOND HONORS IN COMIC GROLI Fa nth ons elected .eeretnre of the Castel n College Comics association at thou annual contention in Hotel A..tor, New Yolk c.f.', Friday and Satuiday The position is mm:dent to second honors in a classification of the leading collexiate comic public ations in the East who sent mpre sentatit en leint,,, of the stuff utL•:ndme• the "'octave were Ehadore it Nollerer 'Bl, cditoi-m•-chord, 11011111 C. IVen rich 'jl, advettivinc o,,,onger, nod Rhlh.mi A Mime, 'Bl, btrtincbs Although authoi dies has a failed to de , ognate a maid for Ns ceding out the room-mote's loudest ties and for the removal of modernistic fuiniture and other e, Os to society, the prm- Opal impetus for the pr.tsent day Tatirijiatt. NITTANY LION INN TO HOLD FORMAL OPENING MAY STH Operating Company Will Invite 250 Trustees, Faculty For Dinner Dance HOTEL MANAGER PLANS STUDENT HOUSEWARMING Finished Inn To Accommodate 150 Guests With 77 Rooms On European Plan rot nial opening of the Nanny Lion Inn, College hotel, Hill tale place May. 5 with a-special student olien mg planned two Heel, later, John N. LeVine, managei of the inn, announc ed yesterdal.. Invitations will be sent to inure than 250 tiusties, faculty membeis, and friends of the College to attend a dinner dance and housewarming at the inn The building a ill he open for inspection May 1, the manages Students ,ill be shown fin faci lities of the building at a function to %%Inch repir.sentatives from the cam pus will be invited The date will be set co that it wdl not conflict with either Moth,' , Dav weekend, Mas 8 to 10, or Junim Prom on May 17, the manager promised Accommodate 110 Guests Ton nih newly all the shipments of the furnishing hone, placing of the fin nsture ,ill begin Monday Rooms will be randy for guests immediately aft er the formal opening, Mr LeVine said, while several ieservations have alicady been made. A main dining room accommodating burg acacleim Ile receis,l his bash i 300 and three smallei sening, 100050,0 m o f degs en from Penn seatmg tog,ther 115 diners mill be I State in 1919, and atm a yeas as ready for occupancy by the fiict meek special appientne to the Ness YOI of May. The dining rooms mill be; Central radioed he returned to the 'run' separate limn the sleeping, ac-i College as an instructor in mscham commodations on the European plan ,cal ngineeting ISeventy-seven sleeping thambei s mrtb Specialized in Steam Turbines rosin for 150 guests are among the • inn's facilities The lounges and lob-i Ile mode assistant rirofessoi •by mill be famished in the Dutch of inechawcal engineciing in 1920. and served in this capacity until the style of early Pennsy ham colonists °punt"' for the College by a hotels I time of his death Besides his 1, oil, lin the class room,, he spent many service corporation, the Nittany Lion 'sentinels with the Engineeling Inn is the newe=t in a chain of elder, 'sentinels hostelries Mi. LeVine, tem- P o Tm t 7 ‘ t, l L;t:tZ' o . n in dent manager, eras formerly opetatin _g th= past of Door Pose Inn, snamo „ net, Mass , fois sass lie specialized in steam Mrs LeVine .d Eklund L Wicllund tu lt l o n f e o ' „r d ßo s i e s f hii, e ' s O i t i s i. 7 soil ho his mill assist Inns here ad c, tmo daughteis, and tmo sons FLORENCE FOWLER L ll o ' dt:e "' e l" ; a ' lof lill-Tra't I: chu•ch I n l n t ° c n i m r e ' tru G lll l' b ' e t ln u t a re„t,o Hall ce.mtet v GAINS 3 AVERAGE . ' " . ` l " k , th".,7,fte` Ilarzl W. Lightstone Mink, Second GALBRAITH PLANS In Senior Clas,—ll.dierlen Florence F Fou let Iced. the senor 1),,c0,s Latadio Ilenui in 11.1111 class scholastically With a 3 ...age, Engineering at 7 O'clock mini ding to ligun es Inc lading each, ynneitei compiled in the Regt,ti al '5 l _ _ office. Hail y W. Lightstone molts second it nth a glade of 94. while Deneld A s he h, 11t, lectat e le, R o hm t Gal- In J. Hattori. follons month 2 8.1 csc at am the fifth of the Libel it In the jomot class, lcm heads the list ninth an ave. age of ,bn t al k 01 'la , ‘ l,, p , rtm.A. of Engltsb 2 79, folio, oil by Chat to, W. Rice ,c°:",°'°':°" will speak on ° Ltd :, tdto with 276 naming nituntalned a 2.74 ' ~• urn Nomad el 7,7 tts s : in 107 grade, John C Hot bort, naval M I N am Is oguuumn at 7 °Vial. 'fines- Jones, Miss Lavamla N Pepple, and 'dn.'. nightßobot t W Whams me trod finthud! Mr Galbraithecented Ins bachelor. place of at is dog, ee titan Rutgets lamel- Oscar MI Davenpoi t leads the soph- s:tY it 11721 anti his mate dem c-• onion es ninth a 2 42 ,[vet age. Solicit 1. """ P 7"" in 1020 Betel Tsthan rants,second highest, hao-I,oiiting to Penn State as a menmer of the English composition depai mg attained a grade of 2 wide Miss t. Ermine Ii Rutledge canes nest with to"'"l lnctaught i" Ads, St 2.88 At the close of the In st some,.John's, and MamKetum pn epal atom ter, Orvns R Millet and John T. i ' 1: " 1 ` . Ryan Jl. Mere Led for lust Place 1111 Having been a student of Ilcal n the freshman class, ninth 29 math 1' 01 ' I ns 1"-'1""'" college, Itt w egee , and loin K. 'Mt Galina:tit w.II present an tieconn , Walter n tusked second with 29,1 1 of that onitet Mhu has been designat ed "rho leading mains e mot itet of the JOHN HARRIS '32 WEDS , poten L t. nuked of all pm l essot nds ,"enas In auDi Frad pi s FLORENCE SIENGES '33 of EtlghTh ht tiatote, in his latest 1 honk, nThe Nen Amet teen LiPsa- Couple Intend To Continue Present ! tone " College Careers Begun Here DE 17, 01111 - 010;t — E'S - 61 OTHER Chmamng a college romance, Flol ence•A Menges '33 and John A. liar rzi 32, Mete !minted last Friday of -I Wont woo lecoVed her• Thu, %day tel noon at the home of the Etude's night. that Mi.: Hale Wham!, into parents m Allentown Attendants at, thei of Dean Plant C ls'hihnnr~, of the oedding wet e 3Arr Louise Ruhmel, the School of Cheinisttv and Physics, of Allentoo n, and Kenneth A had died at het home in Ninth Ault man bolo, Mi,. lieu I (amble, infla •aced Both Mice Menge, and Ilia ins are by advancing Veal% I, 4111.1 to has., well-I.llmi on the campus, the fot nrar I been the can, of Afri. IVhit:m.l's in her fit:oll.n year being pi evident death. • of the women'b clays, while the latter i Dean Whitmore ,as nt Indianapoli , , 1% th men hot of the Alpha Kerne Pllnd , at the thee of his mothei's Date, rite, The4pien4, and of last death, attending the annual meeting Co-Eds Lead Men in Scholastic Averages Class Nominations To Close Tuesday Nomination, lon CILI, OfflCol, and student council member , : must be made by 12 o'clock Timdav, ~c-colding colding to Amthur C Miller 'JI, chairman of the council's election collimate" Accoiding to the pio,isions of the lecontly tooted code, nomince.3 for tire class positions must smite signatin es of fifty menthols of the student bode to qualify for a piece on the list No campaigning mai, be calmed on bcfoi e April 21 xhu publication of espenses, clique alignments, anal appimal of cam paign material 13 moulted before the regulai election, scheduled lot May 5 to 7 REISH DIES AFTER PNEUMONIA ATTACK Short Illness Pros es Fatal to Enginee) ing Professor Early Weclnesd,* Folloamg a t illness, Pi of William H. lice.ll of the mechanical •ngmeeting depaamert died of an acute attack of pneumonia sally Wednesday running, at his lion, on Hamilton as coup He aas thn ty sin en yea, of age Professo, Ree,h aas Lan n at Centre Hall in 1804 congaing his -aim education in the public schools there, he prepared foi college at Melee,- FIFTH L. A. TALIc 1 ile,day Night ESTABLISHED PRICE 5 CENTS Attain 1.54 To Exceed All-College Grade Level of 1.26 SIGMA TAU PHI SHCURES FIRST AMONG NATIONALS Chi Upsilon Beads Local Groups As Delta Gamma Outranks Women Fraternities AVonien excelled nun students in , tholastit uoilt for the first senieq.r , of thin -car by an average grade of 1 11 for the en-eds and 1.21 for the r cp, trent ding to a nun sop bring sent to till Oft:unit:og and sororities from t l, -. Rettisttar', office With the f olletre as men set at I 28. Sigma Tau Pht exceeded the I'l , nthei men', national lintel nities by tattling an an era, grade of 1 87 Alpha Chi Cho follotyvd - with 119 mink Phi Sigma Delta and Theta No Thistlon tad for third place, each g. m rig an atetage of 1 48 Dell r Gamin, out: nidttd other Ni omen', national gluons ,ith I 411 Chi One.ga and Kappa Kappa (lam ina folloned ,ith tabulations of 1 78 and 177 r , spectlvelv. Laotittlphia headed the thice total vitt - pities, rat ter; 1 St ,h la Oread placed second ith 1 73 Senior, Rank Highest Lending the n ^n's local fraterms tic Chi Upsilon •^cured an nt erage of I 'l2, toppintr Emma in second Macs and Onnurg Epsilon, thud, u ith rats nos of 12:7 and 11 5 t espectlvely. Alpha Zeta, national honorary agris salt oral ft atrunity, 1i1111111,11.1 01er all the g. oups listed with an a,era,:so of 2 OS In recording classVtlll=4, the Registrar found that the senior class l e d th e other groups with a rating of I GI, felon oil by the ;olio, vii h lii Nest e, no the freshmen Is ith 1 11 v. 11 .,, the sophomores rated last, as etaging 1 11 Women', gi oups escelled the men'., oit; sn ration, to both national anti lonia dint:ions et hen the figure, shoe- , d 'hat the lost ths cc tanking national Nate, nitres of the n omen all bell nigher arcs than the fist pia, I,er's ft atm nits The same arrange ment appea-td in a comparison of 011101 local fraternty as el ages Sento, in Theta Nu Pp• lon ianli •d fn St among all the son.or group, n the nallonal fiat. natev Kappa Junto, we, e fast among thr •hu d > cal gioup ble Phi Sigma ophomol es and the Delta Chi rleshinen cradled in their re,pectr e Among- the l,nouni: mammal, Del ' • Dunn Sen., ranked filSt of all 'lie (moth Neal poops while Kapp4 K.ppa Caine , ophommes and yo mons led second and floe,' :.enr 1,101, (C . 0.//10, I/ IPII 1"/ l i on i'fige i) MORSE Tll.ltS Ar SCRANTON Adhr m 0 ,Mo,e, esecutcve ceerel - Its to Pr c•idcnt flet/el, addr , ,,ed th e, aduating. chi, or the Scranton ',touch ,/ hoot of the deual talent of encrinceong e‘tension at their an nual conirr.nceluent dinner given in the Clcimbei o' Cormier cc building et Scranton, Monday narlit. I C' Boel tin, u per r root of launch keheeks al ,0 , pohe Diplomas wen e presented 10 t, el% e gt actuate, Penn State Picture Fans To Test Talkie In Company Contest Penn State students has e alves•s been constdoed good judges of mo , Won pietur• elites tannment Fur years State College has been noted for the knan It skin mg of mantles and the re attain 01 local en oni ds has ken pass ed on to the mutineers as an Indica non of hart the pietas e might be re ceived ehen ganunalle shown lam gels as a result of this and at the nenquest of a national moducing eompane. Pair State has hem se lected to test out tine nektaons of a "(loss-sect um" (loud towsud the lat est Norma Sheol. tincture, "Sit ang-to Stu Ktes," boon to be shown lane lhe COLLEGRN and the local tl,atte management ale coop ating in Npon.oting a Re- ketlon Contest Muth e, open to null members of the Lemmtmay Bull cletmln of tit- content, laden, pll7es 111111 Onion union tuition are gin_
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers